We explore what the Bible has to say about the purpose of your work with guest Tom Lutz.
By J.D. Greear. J.D. Greear is the pastor of The Summit Church in Raleigh-Durham North Carolina. The day after my dad retired...
Have you found your passion at work? That perfect job that excites you to jump out of...
Obeying God's call led to transformation for Edgerton Gear, a Wisconsin-based custom gear manufacturer.
How can you navigate the tension between people and profit, and what does the Bible have to say about it?
The Faith Driven Investor podcast features episodes tailored for fund managers, investors, business owners, and pastors who...
Lay people have shaped church history by launching businesses that impacted economies and transformed culture.
This the latest in a series of articles sharing insights from a joint curricular development initiative of the ON, the Theology of...
Whether teaching MBA students spirituality or teaching seminary students business, a professor does well to integrate the...
When we think of banks and Wall Street, perhaps we think of subprime loans, the 1%, and the Great Recession. We very...
"Critical Choices" by Jim Grubs first appeared in the January 2014 issue of "Minding the Gap," a monthly newsletter about faith in...
Has your pastor ever visited your workplace? Mentioned the kind of work you do in a sermon? Given you guidance on a...
Every Square Inch - Conversations on the glory of Christ in business and culture. ...
Joe Kreutz is founder, CEO and President of County Commerce Bank in Ventura, California. Joe had built so many relationships in his...
John Brandon, Vice President, International at Apple, Inc. discusses when and why honesty at work is important, while also encouraging listeners to...
"If God were to sit back and write a mission statement for the institution of business as a whole, what would he...
God made us to work. And it’s only natural to identify ourselves with how we spend most of our waking hours. While mankind’s rebellion against God’s rule makes work frustrating, work is good...
A 12-day Advent journey to prepare for the arrival of Christ. This devotional was originally prepared by InterVarsity's Believers in Business, with...
I hope that as a church we can demonstrate to young women the range of ways for them to express their God-given talents.
True life is to be found, not in riches, not in resentment, but in Jesus Christ, and in living each day for...
J.B. Wood, aka Shrinking Camel, aka the Work Editor for The High Calling, has collected his best columns...
In all of my hustling to help everyone else look good and find value, I thought of myself more as a servant...
Right before I left for my Caribbean cruise earlier this month, I grabbed some magazines piled high on my office desk and stuffed them into my briefcase. I figured with all that potential...
Hello, Corporate America? We have a little problem. No one seems to trust us anymore.
Earlier this month, the Tony Blair Faith Foundation sponsored a seminar debating the role of faith in today’s global marketplace. ...
Bonnie Wurzbacher weighs in on the importance of women leaders in business and church.
“. . . you are the light of the world . . .” Matthew 5:14-16 ...
When my son Howard was about four, every morning as I left for work, he had a set little question: "Daddy, where are you going?" And every morning, I'd say, "Son, I'm going...
As Psalm 107 speaks of large-scale economic activity, so Psalms 127 and 128 speak of the household, the basic unit of economic...
The Valiant Woman makes sure that the work of her hands is marketable. She knows what the...
The proverbs do not stop with commending generosity but go further to claim that caring for the poor is a matter of...
Israel's leaders are indicted for their failure to care for the nation. Ezekiel 34 uses the metaphor of shepherding to illustrate how...
One of the important assumptions throughout this book is that following Jesus needs to inform, impact,, and transform every area of our lives – including our work in the marketplace. How we conduct...
Business is often compared to a poker game. Both, it is argued, require nondisclosure and distrust in order to succeed, with only the naive showing their true intentions.